Pattern of retinal morphological and functional decay in a light-inducible, rhodopsin mutant mouse
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
Hallmarks of Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP), a family of genetic diseases, are a typical rod-conedegeneration
with initial night blindness and loss of peripheral vision, followed by decreased daylight
sight and progressive visual acuity loss up to legal blindness. Great heterogeneity in nature and
function of mutated genes, variety of mutations for each of them, variability in phenotypic appearance
and transmission modality contribute to make RP a still incurable disease. Translational research
relies on appropriate animal models mimicking the genetic and phenotypic diversity of the human
pathology. Here, we provide a systematic, morphological and functional analysis of RhoTvrm4/Rho+
rhodopsin mutant mice, originally described in 2010 and portraying several features of common forms
of autosomal dominant RP caused by gain-of-function mutations. These mice undergo photoreceptor
degeneration only when exposed briefly to strong, white light and allow controlled timing of induction
of rod and cone death, which therefore can be elicited in adult animals, as observed in human RP. The
option to control severity and retinal extent of the phenotype by regulating intensity and duration
of the inducing light opens possibilities to exploit this model for multiple experimental purposes.
Altogether, the unique features of this mutant make it an excellent resource for retinal degeneration
research
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Dominant retinitis-pigmentosa; photoreceptor degeneration; transgenic mice; ganglion-cells; mutations; model; rod; abnormalities; stability; receptor
Elenco autori:
Biagioni, Martina; Novelli, Elena; Strettoi, Enrica
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